The Russian Revolution: 100 Years On

On Tuesday October 31st, 7pm at the Engine Room, Bridgwater Trades Union Council is hosting a special public discussion to mark the October 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. The meeting is part of the Engine Room’s “Bridgwater Together” celebrations, running from Saturday October 28th to Saturday 4th November.

From Tuesday 31st to Saturday November 4th, the Russian Revolution theme continues with an Engine Room exhibition of rare and original Soviet Posters and photographic magazines, organised and curated by Bridgwater’s Irena Brezowski. Under the title ‘Ten Days that shook the world’ this Exhibition of Soviet Cinema posters from 1919-1960’s and Soviet general information posters will be ,arking the centenary of the Russian Revolution 1917-2017 and will be free for all to see from 31ST October – 4 November 2017 at the Engine Room.

Concluding the week of events on Thursday  01/11/’17 at 7.00pm the Film : The Man with a Movie Camera ‘ will be showing. This ground breaking silent Soviet film by Dziga Vertov will be followed by  a discussion .The Engine Room ,50, High St Bridgwater.TA6 3BL (Tel :01278 433187) will be open  10.00-4.00 Monday- Friday, and 10.00-3.00  on Saturday .

100 Years Later

Dave Chapple, Bridgwater TUC Secretary, said:”For millions of people throughout the twentieth century, and for many thousands of socialists in our country today, the overthrow of Kerensky’s Government by the Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, Trotsky, and Kamenev in October 1917, was a world-changing, inspiring and liberating event.”

“October 1917 was hailed by most shades of left-wing opinion in Britain: the militant shop stewards and syndicalists, South Wales miners, Glasgow engineers, the Socialist Labour Party, the British Socialist Party, Sylvia Pankhurst, John Maclean, and many like George Lansbury in the Independent Labour Party. During the next few years it was British Labour’s strike threats against Lloyd George’s war-mongering that helped to ensure that the besieged fledgling “soviet” state survived.

However, even before Lenin’s death in 1924, many previous admirers world-wide, begun to have doubts about the policies and direction of the new state.

As Lenin and Trotsky gave way to Joseph Stalin’s murderous dictatorship, and right down until 1989, millions of workers in the Soviet Union and its satellites developed negative, critical or hostile attitudes to communist state authority, attitudes which led some Russians and Eastern Europeans after 1989 to seek intellectual consolation or refuge in the bright lights of western consumer capitalism.

In Bridgwater today, still Somerset’s premier working-class town, live hundreds of unrepentant and dedicated local socialists, and they are working alongside hundreds of migrant workers from Eastern Europe, including many Russian speakers from Lithuania. Local trades unions have welcomed migrant workers into membership and some are already shop stewards. Of course, many migrant workers retain personal or family memories of pre-1989 days, and so will have their own views on communism and October 1917.

This is why Bridgwater TUC’s  public meeting on October  31st is being organised as a serious discussion between different opinions and perspectives,  and not a celebration.”

Speakers

Speakers are Liz Payne, President of the Communist Party of Britain; Dave Chapple, Secretary of Bridgwater TUC; and Irena Brezowski, a Bridgwater College lecturer who has family and personal links to the old Soviet Union.